Ingredients Seasonings Alliums Leeks Grilled Baby Leeks with Romesco Sauce 4.0 (2,165) Add your rating & review Tony Mantuano created this recipe, also adapted from Wine Bar Food, in homage to the Calçotada in Spain. The Catalan festival celebrates the harvest of calçots, which are slender onions similar to baby leeks. After peeling the charred outer layers, festival-goers dip the softened onions in a vibrant romesco sauce, which Mantuano makes with sweet red bell peppers. "It's fantastic," Mantuano recalls. "Everyone has black fingers from the char." By Tony Mantuano Tony Mantuano F&W Star Chef » See All F&W Chef Superstars Restaurants: Spiaggia, Terzo Piano (Chicago) What’s your signature dish? Gnocchi in a ricotta cream sauce with black truffles. We can’t take that off the menu, we’ve tried. What was the first dish you ever cooked by yourself? Pizza, including making the dough from scratch. I was probably in high school when I first tried it. If you take the time to let it rise properly, it can be such an easy thing to make. It’s also so satisfying. It makes you feel like it’s worth the calories and the time it takes to make. Who is your food mentor? My grandma from Calabria in southern Italy. Anything you had at her house was so flavorful you never forgot it. The way she cooked—and it’s true of all Italian cuisine—is that the fewer ingredients the better. Her tomato sauce was tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, salt and pepper, and pork neck bones. A little dusting of Pecorino Romano, and that’s Calabria on a plate. What’s the most important skill you need to be a great cook? You need to understand how important browning is to flavor. Take the pork neck bone recipe from my grandmother. If the bones weren’t well browned or the garlic wasn’t perfectly golden, it wouldn’t have the same flavor. To be able to deglaze that pan to lift up all those brown flavorful bits, that’s a huge part of cooking. Best-bang-for-your-buck ingredient? Great fresh olive oil. It’s not the most affordable ingredient, but it can really change a dish, and elevate a dish, whether you’re finishing with it or cooking with it. Current food obsession? Tapas. I’m really craving that. The city that has great Spanish food right now, other than in Spain of course, is London. Barrafina is great, and a place called Tapas Brindisa. Best-bang-for-the-buck food trip: Where would you go and why? Miami. There’s a group there called Pubbelly that’s really good. There’s a little shrimp shack called La Camaronera where I had these grouper cheeks on the bone—I’d never seen them before, and they were incredible. And there’s so much great ethnic food there. What is the most cherished souvenir you’ve brought back from a trip? Truffle slicers. When you’re traveling in Italy you can get some really unusual ones. We picked one up that looks like an owl, that’s really cool. What’s your talent, besides cooking? I was a music major in college, before I realized I liked cooking more. Even though I haven’t picked up my trombone in 30 years, I keep telling myself I’m going to do it. If you could invent an imaginary restaurant project, what would it be? I would like to do something that serves dishes that were historically important to Chicago over the past couple of hundred years, using products from this area, like lake perch and frog legs. Not reinvent the wheel, but do them correctly, like shrimp Dijon and beautiful prime rib. If you were facing an emergency, and could only take one backpack of supplies, what would you bring? Great olive oil, great balsamic, flour, good Parmesan, and honey from Mieli Thun in Italy, which is the most incredible monofloral honey. They have chestnut honey, artichoke honey. It’s made by this nomadic beekeeper who takes the bees to wherever certain flowers are blossoming. What is your favorite snack? I’m a real sucker for Cape Cod potato chips. There’s also a cheese made in Wisconsin called brick cheese. Some of that sliced really thinly, with Cape Cod potato chips and a cold beer would satisfy all the senses. Food & Wine's Editorial Guidelines Updated on March 8, 2017 Print Rate It Share Share Tweet Pin Email Photo: © Quentin Bacon Total Time: 40 mins Yield: 4 Ingredients 1 small ancho chile, seeded 3 tablespoons hazelnuts Two 1/2-inch-thick slices baguette, toasted and torn into 1-inch pieces 3 tablespoons roasted almonds, preferably Marcona, coarsely chopped 1 garlic clove, chopped 2 plum tomatoes—peeled, seeded and coarsely chopped 1 roasted red pepper from a jar, cut into 1-inch pieces 1/2 tablespoon sherry vinegar 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for brushing 1 tablespoon chopped flat-leaf parsley Salt and freshly ground black pepper 16 baby leeks or thick scallions, trimmed Directions Light a grill. Preheat the oven to 350°. In a small heatproof bowl, cover the ancho with hot tap water and soak until softened, about 15 minutes. Drain. Meanwhile, in a pie plate, toast the hazelnuts in the oven for about 10 minutes, or until fragrant and lightly browned. Let the hazelnuts cool, then transfer them to a kitchen towel and rub them together to remove the skins. Transfer the hazelnuts to a work surface and let cool completely, then coarsely chop. In a food processor, combine the ancho with the hazelnuts, toasted baguette, almonds and garlic and process to a smooth paste. Add the tomatoes, roasted red pepper and vinegar and puree. With the machine on, slowly pour in the 1/4 cup of olive oil and process until blended and smooth. Scrape the romesco sauce into a bowl, stir in the parsley and season with salt and black pepper. Brush the leeks with oil and season with salt and pepper. Grill over high heat until charred all over, about 3 minutes. Serve with the romesco sauce alongside. Make Ahead The romesco sauce can be refrigerated for up to 2 days. Bring to room temperature before serving. Suggested Pairing To go with these grilled baby leeks, pour Catalonia's (and Spain's) most famous sparkling white wine, Cava. Avinyó's citrusy nonvintage Brut is Mantuano's choice. Rate it Print